Margaret Strauss Berman Family Collection 1898-2005
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- Topics
- Strauss, Ludwig, 1855-, Weinberger, Siegmund, 1878-1968, Jews, German, Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), Jewish physicians, World War, 1914-1918
- Collection
- lbinoindex; microfilm; americana; additional_collections
- Contributor
- Leo Baeck Institute Archives
- Language
- German
- Volume
- 1
- Item Size
- 243.1M
The papers contained in this collection document part of the lives of several family members of Margaret Strauss Berman. In addition to biographical summaries written by herself, held in Series I, there are photographs, correspondence, newspaper articles, book pages, a diary and further personal documents related to different parts of Margaret Strauss Berman's family
Series II is mainly composed of copies of Ludwig Strauss's papers including personal documents along with newspaper articles on him. Further documents related to the family of Margaret Strauss Berman's mother are held in Series III. Included are papers and photographs of Siegmund Weinberger, Isidor Behr and Alma and Jacob Simon together with a diary of Aron Weiler
Margaret Strauss Berman was born as a daughter of Flora Behr and Karl Strauss in Speyer, Germany in 1922. In later years the family moved to Neustadt an der Weinstrae, where Karl Strauss taught mathematics and physics at the local school. After 1935 he had to leave school because of a new Nazi legal measure. In 1938, when Margaret was no longer allowed to attend school, her parents sent her to Newark, New Jersey. In the very same year her father Karl Strauss was arrested during the Kristallnacht and sent to Dachau. After his release the family moved to Mannheim. In 1941, they were deported to Gurs and in 1942 to Auschwitz, where they perished
Margaret Strauss Berman's paternal grandparents Klara and Ludwig Strauss lived in Bad Dürkheim. Her grandfather, a teacher at a Jewish school, was president of the Jewish community in the Palatinate, president of the synagogue in his hometown and the conductor of a local chorus. He also was the head of the local Democratic Party and a member of the city council but in 1933 he was forced to renounce his public offices at the instigation of the regional Gauleiter. After Kristallnacht he and his wife Klara moved to Mannheim from where they were deported to Gurs, where they died in 1942
Erna Behr, a sister of Margaret Strauss Berman's mother, was married to Sigmund Weinberger. He had a medical practice in Heidelberg for 30 years, before he immigrated to the United States. One of Margaret Strauss Berman's other relatives, Alma Behr, married Jacob Simon who was wounded in World War I. The couple lived in Homburg until they immigrated to New York. Alma's brother, Isidor Behr, also served in World War I. He perished with his wife and three children in Auschwitz
In the United States Margaret Strauss Berman became a microbiologist. She married and had three children: Charles, Eve and Anne Berman
Finding aid available online:
Series II is mainly composed of copies of Ludwig Strauss's papers including personal documents along with newspaper articles on him. Further documents related to the family of Margaret Strauss Berman's mother are held in Series III. Included are papers and photographs of Siegmund Weinberger, Isidor Behr and Alma and Jacob Simon together with a diary of Aron Weiler
Margaret Strauss Berman was born as a daughter of Flora Behr and Karl Strauss in Speyer, Germany in 1922. In later years the family moved to Neustadt an der Weinstrae, where Karl Strauss taught mathematics and physics at the local school. After 1935 he had to leave school because of a new Nazi legal measure. In 1938, when Margaret was no longer allowed to attend school, her parents sent her to Newark, New Jersey. In the very same year her father Karl Strauss was arrested during the Kristallnacht and sent to Dachau. After his release the family moved to Mannheim. In 1941, they were deported to Gurs and in 1942 to Auschwitz, where they perished
Margaret Strauss Berman's paternal grandparents Klara and Ludwig Strauss lived in Bad Dürkheim. Her grandfather, a teacher at a Jewish school, was president of the Jewish community in the Palatinate, president of the synagogue in his hometown and the conductor of a local chorus. He also was the head of the local Democratic Party and a member of the city council but in 1933 he was forced to renounce his public offices at the instigation of the regional Gauleiter. After Kristallnacht he and his wife Klara moved to Mannheim from where they were deported to Gurs, where they died in 1942
Erna Behr, a sister of Margaret Strauss Berman's mother, was married to Sigmund Weinberger. He had a medical practice in Heidelberg for 30 years, before he immigrated to the United States. One of Margaret Strauss Berman's other relatives, Alma Behr, married Jacob Simon who was wounded in World War I. The couple lived in Homburg until they immigrated to New York. Alma's brother, Isidor Behr, also served in World War I. He perished with his wife and three children in Auschwitz
In the United States Margaret Strauss Berman became a microbiologist. She married and had three children: Charles, Eve and Anne Berman
Finding aid available online:
- Addeddate
- 2012-07-19 16:03:25
- Call number
- 000200462
- Foldoutcount
- 0
- Identifier
- margaretstraussb01berm
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t5p85k44s
- Neverindex
- true
- Noindex
- true
- Ocr_converted
- abbyy-to-hocr 1.1.37
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.21
- Page-progression
- lr
- Page_number_confidence
- 12
- Page_number_module_version
- 1.0.3
- Pages
- 185
- Ppi
- 300
- Scandate
- 20120802143355
- Scanner
- microfilm06p.sanfrancisco.archive.org
- Scanningcenter
- sanfrancisco
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
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